Showing posts with label Pirated software. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pirated software. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Anonymous doxes Cambodia after Pirate Bay arrest

Secrets from Kyrghyztan and Ukraine released to show Cambodia what's what

12th September 2012
By Phil Muncaster
The Register (UK)

Hacktivist group Anonymous has been up to its old tricks again, this time claiming to have hacked and uploaded a heap of sensitive Cambodian government documents in retaliation for the arrest and extradition back to Sweden of The Pirate Bay (TPB) co-founder Gottfrid Svartholm Warg.

Warg was arrested in Cambodia by Swedish police under an international warrant and shipped back to the motherland last week to start the one year prison term handed down to him in 2009.

The co-founder of the world’s most famous torrent site may also face fresh charges of helping to hack the Swedish government’s tax office and IT consultancy Logica.

Anonymous released a short statement and links to over 5,000 sensitive government documents as part of a new campaign dubbed #OpTPB.

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Cambodia deports Pirate Bay co-founder, heading to Sweden

Reuters, September 11, 2012

Cambodia on Monday deported a Swedish co-founder of Pirate Bay, one of the world's biggest free file-sharing websites, who was convicted and sentenced to prison in Sweden for breaching copyright laws.

Gottfrid Svartholm Warg, 27, who had been living in the Cambodian capital, Phnom Penh, for four years to avoid a jail sentence for Internet piracy, was arrested at Sweden's request.

Warg was put on a plane to Bangkok late on Monday and was due to take a flight from there to Stockholm early on Tuesday, said Chhuor Kimny, head of police at Phnom Penh International Airport.

Police were investigating allegations by Warg's supporters that they had hacked into some government websites in protest at his detention, Cambodian national police chief Kirth Chantharith told Reuters on Monday.

Thursday, September 06, 2012

Did Sweden Offer Cambodia $59 Million for the Pirate Bay Founder’s Head?

Sep 5, 2012
Mario Aguilar
Gizmodo

Pirate Bay founder Gottfrid Svartholm was recently scooped up by Cambodian authorities in Phenom Penh at the request of the Swedish government. Just yesterday Cambodia agreed to send him back to Sweden to serve his year-long jail sentence for creating the Pirate Bay. Turns out the Swedes might have paid HUGE for Cambodia's cooperation.

TorrentFreak reports that Cambodia and Sweden announced a strengthening of "bilateral ties. In other words, Sweden will be sending a handsome $59 million aid package over to Cambodia. (So far the only other source reporting the story is the large Chinese news agency Xinhua.)

Tuesday, September 04, 2012

Cambodian authorities to deport Pirate Bay co-founder

Gottfrid Svartholm Warg (L) and Peter Sundin from Pirate Bay in Stockholm, on February 15, 2009, give their views on the eve of their trial. Cambodian authorities have agreed to deport Warg from the country today. Photograph: AFP Photo/Scanpix Sweden/Fredrik Persson

Tuesday, 04 September 2012
Cheang Sokha
The Phnom Penh Post

Cambodian authorities have agreed to deport Pirate Bay co-founder Gottfrid Svartholm Warg from the country in the immediate future, the deputy police commissioner confirmed today.

General Sok Phal said he met with Swedish authorities this morning and, due to the lack of an extradition treaty between the two kingdoms, Sweden requested the deportation of Svartholm Warg.

“We will use the Immigration Law against him to deport him out of our country and Minister of Interior Sar Kheng will sign on the deportation request letter from the police commissioner soon,” Phal told the Post.

Obama Ambassador In Cambodia On Day Pirate Bay Founder Was Arrested

Ron Kirk and Cham Prasidh in Cambodia Thursday (Image credit:khmernews.com)
September 3, 2012
TorrentFreak.com

With the destruction of The Pirate Bay seemingly an impossible mission for the time being, seeing that the site’s former operators serve their sentences appears to be the next best thing for the authorities. Following the unlikely news last week that site co-founder Gottfrid Svartholm had been arrested in Cambodia, a country rarely associated with its interest in intellectual property issues, it will perhaps be of interest that President Obama’s trade ambassador was in Cambodia on that very day.

It is well-known that the top brass at the U.S. movie and music industries have the ever-sympathetic ears of those in government, not least due to the “revolving door” phenomenon illustrated perfectly by current MPAA chief and former senator Chris Dodd.

In recent months, Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom has claimed time and again that key Hollywood figures used their influence to persuade some of the most powerful men in the United States to act against his company.

Friday, September 26, 2008

Microsoft set to crack down on counterfeits

Thursday, 25 September 2008
Written by Hor Hab The Phnom Penh Post

MICROSOFT plans to crack down on pirated software by forcing users to validate software online, said Pily Wong, the Cambodia country manager. The Windows Genuine Advantage (WGA) would come online in the next few days and would give users 30 days to validate their software. Users found with pirated software would see their screens go black every 60 minutes and a warning flashed across the screen.

"We strongly encourage those who have not had the chance to activate their copies of Windows XP Professional to take the necessary steps to do so," Pily Wong said.

"Software is an intellectual property, which depending on its complexity, could be the result of the hard work of up to several hundred thousands of researchers, programmers and testers," Pily Wong said. He estimated that more than 90 percent of all Microsoft products in the Kingdom are counterfeit.

ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY GEORGE MCLEOD

Saturday, February 10, 2007

Pirated Software's Problem [in Cambodia]

FEBRUARY 9, 2007

By Nathan Spande
Dark Reading (New York, USA)

One of the biggest challenges living someplace like Cambodia (which I do) is finding all of the cool tech toys that my geek genes tell me I need. Finding software is similarly difficult, at least when it comes to legal copies of software. I can go down the block to my local market and find almost any software program, music CD, or DVD my little heart could desire, for somewhere around $2 per disc. Finding a legitimate copy of, say, Microsoft Office, is much more of a challenge.

So how does this impact the security scene here? Well, for one thing, those pirated copies at the local markets almost certainly contain what they advertise (whether it be Office, Oracle, or Myst). Many of them also almost certainly contain a little bit more (insert name of your favorite virus/trojan/spambot here). Uh oh.

Now, Cambodia is small, remote, and extremely unconnected. Very few people here can afford a PC, let alone the monthly Internet access. I pay over $100 each month for my 128-kbit/s ADSL link. In a country where $60 a month is a good salary, there are clearly few people even thinking about home network access, let alone spending hundreds of dollars on software, or even $4 on pirated software.

However, this "a little bit more" situation is what's happening in the rest of the developing world, including countries like, say, China, which are much more populous and connected. Think about half a billion people using pirated software, with perhaps 64k connections for each. Add in a few thousand Internet cafes. Even if only 1 percent of the pirated software is infected with some sort of malware (and my hunch is that this is an underestimate), this is clearly a non-trivial problem.

Suddenly all that spam that has been making it through my two layers of filters is not so surprising. All of a sudden we have a large portion of the developing world essentially acting as open relays for spammers. We also have half the world available for a very, very big DDOS attack. This is not good.

So, how do we deal with this problem? That's far less clear to me. There are several problems that need to be addressed to solve it entirely, but it seems relatively intractible on the consumer end. Before you can get consumers to use licensed software, it has to be affordable.

As soon as it is affordable for the local populations, it is going to be purchased locally and resold internationally at deep discounts (already done in the electronics/photo equipment world, where "gray market" equipment is available with no warranty but otherwise in new condition). That makes it unlikely that large (or small) software companies will go for it. The other option would be to solve in a robust way the problem of malware in the operating system. Clearly that's not going to happen any time soon. A third option would be to encourage the use of free (as in beer) equivalent programs.

I'm writing this article using OpenOffice Writer, which is great for me, but I just don't see it taking the world by storm right now. For one thing, knowing OpenOffice doesn't give one much of a leg up in the job market, where knowing Microsoft Office certainly does, and computer skills are one of the few things that show promise at getting people out of poverty around here.

The other thing is a distribution problem. OpenOffice at the local market costs the same as Microsoft Office. If I download OpenOffice it actually costs me more money, since here I pay up to $0.10 per MByte for traffic over my DSL link.

So what's the world to do? I don't see a practical way to eliminate pirated software in the developing world right now. The incentives just aren't there for the local populations. Perhaps if we can develop good filtering, or at least monitoring, at the ISP level we'll be able to reduce the volume of such traffic.

Until then, I guess the best we security professionals can do is keep patching holes on the machines we control and be happy that our own PCs are free of the evil beasties. It seems that escaping being a target is just not likely to happen any time soon.

Nathan Spande has implemented security in medical systems during the dotcom boom and bust, and suffered through federal government security implementations. Special to Dark Reading